STATE v. LEROY TERRY.

Concealed Weapons.

1. One who is in the occupation of land as a
tenant, even at will or by sufferance, or an agent or overseer, or any one else
who is vested with the right of dominion, is the owner of land within the
meaning of the statute against carrying concealed weapons.

2. A mere servant or hireling who is found with a
concealed weapon on the premises of his employer, is not on his own premises,
and is guilty under the act.

Indictment for carrying a
concealed weapon, tried before Clark, J., and a jury, at August Term,
1885, of Johnston.

The evidence was that the defendant was hired by the prosecutor for a
certain purpose, namely, to tend and cultivate the lands of the prosecutor; that
the defendant slept and lived at his father's house, about a mile distant from
the residence of the prosecutor; that the defendant, on the day in question, was
in a field of the prosecutor, engaged in work which he had been employed to do
by the prosecutor; that on the prosecutor's remonstrating with him about the
neglect of his work the defendant became angry, used insulting language, drew a
pistol from the inside pocket of his coat, which was lying on a stump in the
field, and made threats against the prosecutor, and walked off with the pistol
in his hand. The defendant's father's house was on another, but adjoining tract
of land, belonging also to the prosecutor, and the defendant, in going from his
father's house, his sleeping place, need not pass over any land except that of
the prosecutor.

The defendant asked his Honor to charge the jury, that being a
servant of the prosecutor, and on the prosecutor's land at the time he was seen
with the pistol, and there being no evidence that he had that day been off the
prosecutor's land with the pistol, the defendant was not guilty. His Honor
refused to give the charge, and the defendant excepted. There was a verdict of
guilty and a rule for a new trial. The rule was discharged and the defendant
appealed.(p.586)

Attorney-General for the State.

No counsel for defendant.

Ashe, J., after stating the
facts: The case falls clearly within the inhibition of the statute. The statute
forbids any person from carrying concealed weapons except when on his own
premises. The word "premises" here is evidently used as synonymous with land,
for the statute proceeds to declare if any one not being on his own lands shall
have about his person any such deadly weapon, such possession shall be prima
facie evidence of the concealment thereof, that is, one may carry a weapon
concealed about his person while on his own land, but when he goes off his own
upon that of another, and is seen with or is known to have a deadly weapon, as
is described in the statute, the bare possession of the weapon is prima
facie evidence of the concealment. What is meant by his own
premises and his own land is not that he must have a legal title
to the land for, we think, one who is in the occupation of land as a tenant at
will or at sufferance would, in the meaning of the statute, be the owner
thereof. So would an agent or an overseer, or any one who is vested with the
right of dominion or superintendence over it.

But we cannot see how one who is a mere servant can in any sense of
the term be said to be the owner of the land, or to be on his own premises, when
he is simply employed as a laborer. He has no interest in the land and no
dominion over it.

The defendant, then, not being on his own land, is at work as a
hireling on the land of the prosecutor, and when remonstrated with for some
negligence in his work, flies into a passion, draws a pistol from the inside
pocket of his coat, which he had placed upon a stump, and with it threatened his
employer. It is to be presumed that he carried the pistol with him into the
field, and probably with the very purpose of using it in the event of a
difficulty with his employer. It is to be (p.587)presumed that he wore his coat to the field. If any one
carried it there for him, or if the pistol was so carried in the coat pocket as
to be open to view and not concealed, it was easy to be proved by his own
testimony; but he offered no testimony to rebut the prima facie case made
out against him by the facts of the case, and he was properly convicted. There
is no error. Let this be certified.